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IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
JOSEPH ARPAIO,
Appellant-Plaintiff,
v.
BARACK OBAMA, ET AL.
Appellees-Defendants.
Case No. on Appeal: 14-5325
Appeal from U.S. District Court
Case No. 1:14-cv-01966 (BAH)
APPELLANT'S STATEMENT OF ISSUES TO BE RAISED ON APPEAL
Pursuant to this Court's Order of December 29, 2014, Appellant hereby
submits the following Statement of Issues to be raised in this proceeding.
Appellant reserves the right to alter the issues to be raised on appeal.
1. Whether the District Court erredby construing Plaintiffs case and analyzing
Plaintiffs standing in relation to claims different from the actual lawsuit that
Plaintiff brought, purely as a policy dispute.
2.
Whether the District Court should have ruled the Executive Branchs grant
of amnesty to approximately half of all illegal aliens present in the nation as
an unconstitutional usurpation of legislative authority from Congress on the
motion for preliminary injunction.
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3. Whether the District Court erred by not requiring the Appellees to comply
with the Administrative Procedures Act (APA) in granting benefits and
amnesty to approximately 6 million illegal aliens on considering the motion
for preliminary injunction.
4. Whether the District Court erred in considering the merits by misconstruing
what the Plaintiff is challenging and arguing as challenging only the U.S.
Governments internal planning of its work and prioritiesand/or national
policy disputes.
5. Whether the District Court erred in considering the merits by concluding that
Congress has endorsed the use of deferred action extending to the
circumstances at issue in the Defendants programs here.
6. Whether the District Court erred in considering the merits by concluding that
the use of deferred action programs by the Executive Branch in the past
provides legal authority or justification for the current deferred action.
7. Whether the District Court erred in considering the merits by concluding that
granting a preliminary injunction could not redress the Plaintiffs injury.
8. Whether the District Court erred in analyzing the factualbases for Plaintiffs
standing by disbelieving Petitioners allegations in the complaint rather than
taking as true all allegations of fact and all inferences.
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9. Whether the District Court erred in analyzing Plaintiffs standing by
concluding that the Sheriffs office suffered no injury-in-fact or interference
with his official duties as Sheriff.
10.Whether the District Court erred in analyzing the factual bases for Plaintiffs
standing by not crediting Sheriff Arpaios allegations of past harm as an
empirical basis for predicting increased or new harm in the future.
11.Whether the District Court erred in analyzing Plaintiffs standing in terms of
redressability of actions by third-party actors by concluding that Plaintiffs
injury could not be redressed through favorable court action.
Dated: January 28, 2015
Respectfully Submitted,
/s/Larry Klayman
Larry Klayman, Esq.
D.C. Bar No. 334581
2020 Pennsylvania Ave. NW #345Washington, DC 20006
Tel: (310) 595-0800Email: [email protected]
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